Tracking entire populations to combat the pandemic now could open the doors to more invasive forms of government snooping later.
Members of Congress have mounted a major threat to your freedom of speech and security online. Senators Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) recently introduced a bill that would undermine key protections for Internet speech in U.S. law. It would also expose providers of the private messaging services we all rely on to serious legal risk, potentially forcing them to undermine their tools’ security.
The so-called EARN IT Act (S. 3398) is anti-speech, anti-security, anti-innovation, and unnecessary. Let’s tell Congress to reject it.
La candidate macroniste est la première à recourir à ce procédé pour les élections municipales parisiennes. Une opération massive contestée par ses adversaires.
Il n'y a pas que les Facebook et les Google du monde entier qui aspirent les données que nous laissons en ligne et qui les utilisent à leur profit. Après tout, la monétisation des données des utilisateurs est le modèle économique dominant dans le monde numérique depuis près de deux décennies.
Schools are increasingly adopting surveillance technology to spy on students while they’re at school, at home, or even on their social media. The companies that make these surveillance products and services advertise them to schools as a way to keep students safe–but there’s no evidence so far that they actually protect students, and worst of all, they can harm the people they are supposed to protect. Surveillance isn’t normal–it’s spying. Schools that use these technologies to track and monitor students are violating their privacy.
Des dizaines de millions de patients font transiter par la plateforme des informations hautement sensibles : l'historique de leur rendez-vous avec des praticiens, parfois le motif de leur consultation et même des ordonnances après des téléconsultations.
Instance associative composée d'un groupement d'entreprises et d'entrepreneurs du marketing à la performance pour le développement et l'innovation digitale.
While smartphones have been heralded as the coming of the next generation of communication and collaboration, they are a step backwards when it comes to personal security, anonymity and privacy.
Guardian Project creates easy to use secure apps, open-source software libraries, and customized solutions that can be used around the world by any person looking to protect their communications and personal data from unjust intrusion, interception and monitoring.
Whether your are an average person looking to affirm your rights or an activist, journalist or humanitarian organization looking to safeguard your work in this age of perilous global communication, we can help address the threats you face.
Records from Florida, where law enforcement has long used the controversial technology, offer an inside look at its risks and rewards.